Armatures are wire frames buried deep inside scultpures for structural support. They are a necessity for providing strength to the clay and direction to the artist.
Painters use frameworks, too. If you look at many of the old masters’ paintings, you will find evidence of their armatures—figures arranged in the golden mean, root rectangles and other polygons. Once you learn to see them, they are everywhere.
I believe any creative person can benefit from armatures. I use them all the time in my creative endeavors, although rarely physical wires or even the golden ratio. I use time, patterns, and symmetry to structure my videos and writing. Since I am often telling documentary stories or explaining things, my choice of armatures works out well for the audience as well as for me.
There are people who say that structure limits creativity, but I disagree. I create improvise on top of my frameworks. Having an armature to drape ideas on allows me to set a creative desitnation, discard the paths not taken and focus on creating. An armature allows for flexibility and change, but makes sure that I achieve what I intended.
Posted by kuri at February 11, 2005 11:30 AM> There are people who say that structure limits creativity
As my old pal Goethe used to say, “Restriction shows the master’s hand.”
Posted by: jh on February 11, 2005 03:59 PMI wholly agree.
Posted by: filmtunes on February 12, 2005 02:17 AMYes indeed. I agree as well - structure shows the master’s hand. I like the golden mean - the nautilus shell.
Posted by: Jenn on February 15, 2005 11:48 PM